wealth

Wealth

The state of having strong financial resources. There is no strict definition of how much one needs to have in order to be "wealthy," but, in general, it refers to one with significantly more assets than liabilities. However, socially, a person with too much debt may be considered to be wealthy because others are not aware of his/her true financial state. Excess wealth (and wealthy persons) drives economic growth. Some believe this ought to be encouraged, as it eventually makes the remainder of society wealthier. Others, however, believe growth is strongest when the needs of multiple classes, and not just the wealthy, are balanced. A few others believe most wealth ought to be confiscated and redistributed, but this is a minority opinion.

wealth

the total stock of ASSETS owned by the population of a country. Wealth represents past income flows which have been used to buy such assets as houses, land, stocks and shares etc. One commonly used measure of wealth in the UK is that of ‘marketable wealth’, consisting of those assets which are readily saleable. Wealth in the UK, like income, (see DISTRIBUTION OF INCOME), is unevenly distributed (see Fig. 89). See WEALTH TAX.

Fig. 197 Wealth. The distribution of marketable wealth in the UK, 2002. The total includes land and dwellings (net of mortgage debt), stocks and shares, bank and building society deposits and other financial assets but excludes life assurance and pensions. Source: Social Trends, 2004.

wealth

the stock of net ASSETS owned by individuals or households. In aggregate terms, one widely used measure of the nation's total stock of wealth is that of ‘marketable wealth’, that is, physical and financial assets that are in the main relatively liquid. In 2002, marketable wealth in the UK totalled around £3,400 billion (this excludes life assurance and pension entitlements, which account for some one-third of all wealth assets but which are not readily liquid). Marketable wealth is not equally distributed in the UK, as Fig. 197 shows. In 2002, the richest 5% of the population owned 43% of marketable wealth.

As a result of this joint venture, Rich Dad Education training will be offered as a series of educational courses developed to prepare people to take positive action in implementing the Rich Dad principles into their lives to achieve true, long-term financial independence.

The entry of Microsoft into the rich media conferencing market promises to take audio-video-web conferencing into the corporate mainstream, increase general awareness, and change the conferencing and collaboration competitive environment for all," concluded Davis.

Like these other supplicants, the rich man in the Mark 10 story runs up to Jesus on the road and falls on his knees, using the same Greek word ([TEXT NOT REPRODUCIBLE IN ASCII]) as the leper in Mark 1:40.

The wild-fire success of the Rich Dad series has carried over to the other products and seminar programs offered by the Rich Dad Company, the financial education company founded by Robert Kiyosaki, Kim Kiyosaki and Sharon Lechter.

The rich kids interviewed in Born Rich and shown on "Rich Gifts" have, far more than any other children I know, a painful awareness of the trajectory of their lives, and the stereotype of their social station.

WE'VE ALL HEARD the bromide, ``The rich are different from you and me,'' and while it's certainly true to a certain extent, leave it to HBO and MTV to find a new reason for its veracity: The rich can get their home movies platformed on high-profile cable channels.

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